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Do presenters to paediatric meetings get their work published?

F A Riordan1

  • 1Department of Child Health, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Bordeseley Green East, Birmingham B9 5SS, UK. a.riordan@kippers-korner.demon.co.uk

Archives of Disease in Childhood
|November 22, 2000
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Most research presented at UK paediatric meetings is not published in cited journals. Many studies remain unpublished because they were never submitted, highlighting a need for publication support for researchers.

Area of Science:

  • Pediatric Research
  • Medical Publication
  • Scientific Dissemination

Background:

  • Clinical accessibility of scientific meeting research is limited unless published in indexed journals.
  • Assessing publication rates is crucial for understanding research impact.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Evaluate the publication rate of studies presented at two major UK pediatric conferences: Paediatric Research Society (PRS) and British Paediatric Association (BPA).
  • Identify barriers to publication for presented research.

Main Methods:

  • Conducted a Medline search for first authors of abstracts from 1996 PRS and BPA meetings.
  • Utilized postal questionnaires for authors of non-indexed abstracts to gather publication status and reasons for non-publication.

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Main Results:

  • Publication data was obtained for 88 out of 89 presentations.
  • 25/48 PRS studies and 31/40 BPA studies were published in Medline-indexed journals.
  • Primary reasons for non-publication included non-submission (PRS: 15/48, BPA: 6/40) and ongoing review processes.

Conclusions:

  • A significant portion of research presented at pediatric meetings is not published in accessible journals.
  • Researchers presenting at these meetings require assistance with manuscript submission and publication processes.
  • Publication rates varied by study type, with randomized controlled trials showing higher publication rates than observational studies.